Bettor's Strike

Sire
Bettor's Delight
Dam
Winter Rose
Born
2004 Gelding
Present Roll
Sport horse

See HRNZ Information for Bettor's Strike

  


Rachel Sharr is adamant – former New Zealand Cup runner-up Bettor’s Strike is her forever horse. 

“He’s not going anywhere,” she says of the one-time pacing star who won 16 races and nearly $900,000. 

Home for the now 16-year-old is Sharr’s property in North Canterbury, where she has four horses – all either standardbreds  or standardbred crosses. 

She’s been around horses most of her life and her uncle Terry Brosnahan was a harness trainer in Canterbury in the 1980s and 90s.  

It's six years since Sharr bought Bettor’s Strike, and they have come a long way. 

“I’m not much of a rider and I was shit scared of him to start with,” she says, “but once I realised he wasn’t out to kill me….” 

Now they are mates though “he’s not a smoochy horse generally”. 

In the intervening years they have had many adventures including “musters in the McKenzie Country where we have ridden hill country and steep terrain and camped for three days.” 

He’s also competed in eventing  - “he just puts his hoof to anything.” 

Most weekends the pair get out, often with Sharr’s two children, aged 10 and 12, heading to the Waimakariri River for “an hour or so” for a ride and a swim or heading to the  Kiaora Downs horse trials park at Amberley. 

But once a racehorse, always a racehorse - “He likes to be up front, he’s a winner.” 

On the track the Cran Dalgety-trained Bettor’s Strike was second to Monkey King in the 2009 New Zealand Cup and beat Aussie greats Smoken Up and Blacks A Fake to take out the 2009 Victoria Cup at Melton.  

He retired in 2012 with a record of 16 wins from 77 starts, and $890,201 in stakes. 

In the future, as time frees up with her children getting older, Sharr has plans for “Strike”. 

“I’d love to spend more time doing low level events and jumping and some more treks.” 

This November will mark a decade since Bettor’s Strike last race – retirement appears to be suiting him. 

“He has the odd tanty, a one-legged buck, but he’s cruisey  ..and pretty mellow.” 

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